Jason Mouseley is the son of a '70s rock star who passed away a few years ago. On Jason's eighteenth birthday he is set to inherit his father's mansion and a fortune, but only if he meets strict conditions... Read more
| Starring | Luke De Woolfson, Lee Oakes, Melanie Gutteridge, Emma Catherwood |
|---|---|
| Director | Justin Edgar |
| Genres | Comedy |
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Jason Mouseley is the son of a '70s rock star who passed away a few years ago. On Jason's eighteenth birthday he is set to inherit his father's mansion and a fortune, but only if he meets strict conditions...
| Starring | Luke De Woolfson, Lee Oakes, Melanie Gutteridge, Emma Catherwood, Les Dennis, Phil Cornwell |
|---|---|
| Director | Justin Edgar |
| Studio | CINEMA CLUB |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 18 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 13 Jan 2003 Production year: 2001 |
| Format | DVD |
Writer/director Justin Edgar's feature debut has been described as a combination of Animal House-style comedy and British social realism. The Birmingham-set plot revolves around teenage slacker Jason (Luke de Woolfson) who must turn over a new leaf before his 18th birthday so he can inherit the fortune of his dead rock star father. However, his mates and a grasping stepmother have other ideas. Edgar throws in taste-free comic clichés — a chaotic house party, a cute little dog destined for something unpleasant — and a bunch of relatively unknown actors cast as one-dimensional grotesques, but the result is a collection of appalling and amateurish scenes that are neither endearing nor realistic.
British attempt at a gross teen comedy, very tasteless but rarely funny.
Total Rubbish, it is possibly the worst film i have ever seen.
Cineworld has blamed a dip in admissions in the first half of the year on a lack of summer blockbusters. Admissions slipped to 20.6 million from 21.7 million last year, as fewer high-profile movies were released this year compared to last year. Large audiences were not tempted into the cinemas until Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Sex and the City, were released in June which raked in £40 million and £26 million respectively. Tony Bloom, chairman of... Read more